Bispecific antibody Prophylaxis Reduces Bleeding in Hemophilia A, Finds Study
Written By : Medha Baranwal
Medically Reviewed By : Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli
Published On 2026-05-04 15:00 GMT | Update On 2026-05-04 15:00 GMT
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Italy: Researchers have discovered in a new research that among patients with Hemophilia A, prophylaxis with Mim8 was superior to both on-demand therapy and clotting factor concentrate prophylaxis in reducing the annualized rate of treated bleeding events, regardless of inhibitor status.
A phase 3 trial published in the New England Journal of Medicine by Maria Elisa Mancuso and colleagues evaluated the efficacy and safety of Mim8 (denecimig), a novel bispecific antibody designed to replicate the function of activated factor VIII. The therapy is intended for subcutaneous use in patients with hemophilia A, including those with or without factor VIII inhibitors, a group that often faces challenges with conventional treatment approaches.
The randomized study enrolled patients aged 12 years and older and assessed two dosing regimens of Mim8—once weekly and once monthly—administered in fixed injection volumes adjusted by body weight. Participants were categorized based on their pretrial treatment. Those previously receiving on-demand therapy were randomized either to continue their usual treatment or switch to Mim8 at one of the two dosing schedules. Another cohort, previously on clotting factor concentrate prophylaxis, was reassigned to receive Mim8 weekly or monthly, allowing for within-patient comparisons.
The primary outcome was the annualized rate of treated bleeding events, defined as bleeds requiring intervention with coagulation factor products.
The study revealed the following findings:
- In patients previously on on-demand therapy, Mim8 markedly reduced bleeding episodes.
- The annualized bleeding rate decreased to 0.57 with weekly dosing and 0.20 with monthly dosing, compared to 15.76 with continued on-demand treatment.
- This reflects a reduction of over 96% in bleeding events with Mim8 prophylaxis.
- Among patients switching from clotting factor prophylaxis, Mim8 also led to significant improvements.
- Weekly dosing reduced the annualized bleeding rate by 54%.
- Monthly dosing resulted in a 42.8% reduction compared to prior prophylaxis.
- These results suggest Mim8 is more effective than on-demand therapy and may surpass standard prophylactic regimens.
- Safety outcomes were favorable overall.
- Injection-site reactions were uncommon and occurred in a small proportion of injections.
- No thromboembolic events were reported.
- No cases of neutralizing anti-Mim8 antibodies were observed.
The study highlights the potential of Mim8 as a transformative option in hemophilia A management. By significantly lowering bleeding rates with convenient subcutaneous dosing, it may reduce treatment burden and improve quality of life. The consistent efficacy across patients with and without inhibitors further broadens its clinical applicability.
Overall, these findings position Mim8 as a promising advancement in hemophilia care, offering effective and well-tolerated prophylaxis. Further long-term data will help clarify its role in routine clinical practice and its impact on patient outcomes over time.
Reference:
DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2517384
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